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Transcript
Professional resources
MS National
Centre
372 Edgware Road
London NW2 6ND
Tel 020 8438 0700
Scotland
Northern Ireland
Wales/Cymru
Ratho Park
88 Glasgow Road
Ratho Station
Newbridge EH28 8PP
Tel 0131 335 4050
The Resource Centre
34 Annadale Avenue
Belfast BT7 3JJ
Tel 028 9080 2802
Temple Court
Cathedral Road
Cardiff CF11 9HA
Tel 029 2078 6676
MS and palliative care
A guide for health and social care professionals
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common disabling neurological disorder
affecting young adults, and around 85,000 people in the UK have MS.
The MS Society is the UK’s largest charity
dedicated to supporting everyone whose
life is affected by MS – personally or
professionally. The MS Society works
with health and social care professionals
to improve services by:
•
promoting good practice in MS
treatment and care
•
publishing newsletters, reports and
educational materials
•
organising networking opportunities
and events
•
funding health and social care posts
in community, rehabilitation, primary and
acute care settings, and in palliative care
•
funding research into the cause, cure,
and management of MS, as well as
development of services, with an overall
research commitment of £12m
The MS Professional Network is a group
of health and social care professionals with
a common interest in improving services for
people affected by MS. Membership is free
and includes regular newsletters,
conferences and learning events. To join,
go to www.mssociety.org.uk/profs or call
020 8438 0810
Including information on
• palliative care for people severely
affected by MS
• optimising quality of life during advanced
phases of MS
• end of life care
www.mssociety.org.uk
National MS Helpline Freephone 0808 800 8000
Registered charity 207495
MS and palliative care
A guide for health and social care professionals
This guide is for health and social care professionals who are responsible
for the wellbeing of people with advanced MS. To accommodate the needs
of such a diverse readership, the content is designed to allow professionals
to ‘dip’ into the chapters that complement their existing knowledge:
• The first chapter, Overview of MS, discusses relevant aspects of
MS for professionals involved with specialised palliative care teams,
general practice and community nursing teams.
• The second, Palliative care explained, explores the nature and provision
of palliative care. It offers a care pathway that suggests potential trigger
points for considering making referral or liaison with local specialist
palliative care teams. It is aimed at MS teams, neuro-rehabilitation teams
and community nursing teams.
• The third, Palliative care challenges, outlines some of the challenges
faced in caring for people with severe or advanced MS, namely:
- symptom management: pain, spasticity, bowel management and
nutritional support
- cognition and mental capacity
- advance planning
- end of life care
Further information about palliative care can be found at
www.mssociety.org.uk
i
Contents
1
Introduction
2
Overview of MS
4
Incidence and prevalence • Types of MS • Causes • Palliative
care needs
2
Palliative care explained
8
What is palliative care? • Who provides palliative care?
• MS and palliative care • When to consider referral to specialist
palliative care services • Care pathway
3
Palliative care challenges
Symptom management
Neuropathic pain • Musculoskeletal pain • Spasm and
spasticity • Suggested treatments • Case study • What can
palliative care offer? • Bowel management • Nutritional support
• Dysphagia and weight loss
14
Capacity and consent
Cognition • Competency • Capacity • Case study • Lasting
power of attorney
25
Advance planning
Advance directives and living wills • How should they be drawn up?
• Relatives • Case study • Advance planning and MS
• Ventilation • Cardio-pulmonary resuscitation
28
End of life care
Die with or of MS? • Spirituality • A ‘good death’ • NHS end of life
initiatives • Teamwork • Examples of good practice
33
References
37
1
Introduction
It is increasingly recognised that people with advanced MS and other longterm conditions have unmet health and social care needs in the last years
of their lives.2 Many people with advanced MS represent a ‘silent minority’
who have fallen out of acute care follow-up and remain a collective
mystery in terms of their palliative care needs.39 With these concerns in
mind, in 2003 the MS Society launched a three-year project to investigate
the palliative care needs of people living with severe and advanced MS.
contacts. Services varied and were
difficult to contact or access depending
on the locality. One interviewee described
feeling they had to ‘fight for everything’.
The project was a collaboration between
clinicians at King’s College Hospital and
researchers at the Department of Palliative
Care and Policy, King’s College London.
In-depth interviews were conducted with
people in south-east London who were
severely affected by MS, and with a diverse
range of professionals involved in their
care. From these interviews three themes
emerged concerning unmet need:
G
There was a potential role for specialist
palliative care services to be involved
in clinical care in addressing symptom
control, advanced planning, end of life
decision making and concerns about
capacity and cognition.
G
Education and professional discussion
was needed for those involved in
providing palliative care to people
with MS.
G
People affected by severe MS and the
professionals involved in their care
wanted more information, particularly
about services, which they tended to
acquire ad hoc, often through informal
This publication describes the work
completed within the educational strand
of the project. Ten study days were held
throughout the south-east London area from
March to May 2005, reaching an audience
of 232 health and social care professionals.
The sessions were case-based and
interactive, the content evolving through
the participants’ discussion and feedback.
Some 95% of participants evaluated the
sessions as both useful and relevant to
their work.
While the work is grounded in the important
issues highlighted by people severely
affected by MS, it does not seek to represent
the ‘patient’s voice’. People with severe MS
are a diverse group of individuals, who have
their own hopes, fears and challenges with
which they face the future, and the purpose
of this publication is not to make any
judgements about their collective needs.
2
and spiritual support, in line with the
principles of palliative care. (Quality
Requirement 9, page 51).32
It is now more important than ever that, as
professionals, we develop our skills and
knowledge in our care of people with
advanced disease. The National Service
Framework for Long-term Conditions has
challenged us to ensure that:
It is equally important that palliative care
services need to be integrated more
effectively with neurology and neurorehabilitation services in order to provide a
comprehensive and holistic system of care
for people living with advanced MS.
People in the later stages of long-term
neurological conditions are to receive a
comprehensive range of palliative care
services when they need them to control
symptoms, offer pain relief and meet their
needs for personal, social, psychological
What is palliative care?
Palliative care is a service for people severely affected by advanced,
progressive or life-limiting conditions. Its purpose is to maximise
quality of life during the advanced stages of the condition. It takes a
holistic approach and provides expertise in pain relief and symptom
management. It also offers support for complex psychological and
social issues to patients and families. All specialist palliative care
services are carefully tailored to the needs of the individual. These
services can be offered at home, in hospitals and in hospices.
3
1 Overview of MS
This chapter discusses relevant aspects of MS for professionals involved
with specialised palliative care teams, general practice and community
nursing teams.
An estimated 85,000 people in the UK
have MS. It is the most common disabling
condition of the central nervous system
(CNS: the brain and spinal cord) affecting
young adults aged 20 to 40. The duration
of the disease is protracted but the course
is variable and, in individual cases, difficult
to predict.
‘multiple’, which relates to the sites of the
scarring or ‘plaques’, which can occur in
different places throughout the brain and
spinal cord. Symptoms depend on the
position and extent of the scarring within
the CNS, and on how much damage has
occurred.
The prevalence of MS shows striking
geographical variation, as the condition
becomes increasingly more common
with distance from the equator in either
hemisphere. It is a disease of temperate
climates, and as such is common in
northern Europe, northern America and
southern Australia. Even within the UK,
prevalence varies from 115/100,000 in
Surrey in the South East to 170/100,000
in the Orkneys.75
Types of MS
MS varies dramatically from one individual
to another. Some people experience only
very mild disease, others have particularly
aggressive disease and develop profound
disability within a few years of onset. The
following types of MS were established in
1996 and give general guidelines to the
pattern and types of MS disease:58
G
In MS, damage or scarring occurs to the
myelin sheath – a layer of fatty protein that
protects the nerves in the same way that
insulating material protects an electric wire.
This damage (called demyelination) disrupts
the way in which messages, or nerve
impulses, are carried to and from the brain,
and so it can interfere with a range of the
body’s functions.
Relapsing/remitting
In about two thirds of people diagnosed,
MS takes the form of relapses or attacks
interspersed with periods of remission.
This is because the CNS can often
compensate for areas of damage by
repairing myelin or by re-routing
messages around the problem area.
In a remission, symptoms that were
disabling during a relapse can virtually
disappear. Occasionally there is
some residual damage after a relapse,
leading to incremental levels of disability.
The term ‘multiple sclerosis’ comes from
‘sclerosis’, which means scarring and
4
Exacerbations may be triggered by
viral and bacterial infection but not
by vaccination or immunisation.61
This transitional period can be
emotionally and physically difficult, as
people fear the disease has ‘finally
caught up with them’ and often worry for
the future.
Exposure to heat and high humidity
may amplify symptoms (Uhtoff’s phenomena) as may strenuous exercise and
menstruation. Pregnancy protects against
exacerbation but the risk of relapse is
increased following delivery.
G
About 10% of people have this chronic
condition from onset. Symptoms
gradually worsen over the years, without
relapse or remission. This form of MS is
not amenable to the disease-modifying
treatments that have received so much
media coverage.
The treatment for acute relapses is to
treat any underlying infection before
giving a course of oral steroids.70 Steroids
have been shown to influence the rate of
neurological recovery but not the ultimate
degree of recovery.61
Causes
For those with relapsing disease who
meet the criteria set by the Association
of British Neurologists, disease-modifying
therapies (DMT) can be prescribed.
These require (self) administration of a
subcutaneous or intramuscular injection,
given between once a week to daily,
depending on the preparation chosen.
These therapies modulate the immune
response, causing a reduction in both
acute attacks and accumulation of
plaques within the CNS. Therapies
currently on offer include interferon
1a, 1b and glatirimer acetate.69
G
Primary progressive
The cause of MS is unknown, although
there is increasing evidence that suggests
an interplay between environmental
factors (viral infective agents) and genetic
susceptibility. This results in the triggering of
the immune system to attack its own myelin
sheath as if it were a foreign body. Thus,
MS is said to be an autoimmune disease.
It is important to note that MS is not a
hereditary disease. However, families that
already have a member with MS show a
greater risk of developing the condition
than families that have no one with MS.
If a parent has MS, their children are
approximately 16 times more at risk of
developing the disease that the general
population. However this is still a very small
risk. Studies of identical twins have shown
that if one identical (monozygotic) twin
develops MS there is only a 25% chance
that their twin will also develop the
disease.81 Given that they have identical
genetic make-up, genetic factors can only
play a limited part.
Secondary progressive
About 75% of people whose disease
pattern begins with relapsing/remitting
symptoms go on to develop secondary
progressive disease. This heralds a
gradual increase in disability irrespective
of the presence of continuing relapses.
For 50% of people this change occurs
within the first ten years of diagnosis.
This ‘transition’ can be quite gradual and
may only be recognised in retrospect,
as the awaited remission never happens.
For others progression can be quite
marked, and the loss of the improved
quality of life previously experienced in
remissions can be profound.17
5
Figure 1 Traditional concept of palliative care
Figure 2 New concept of palliative care
Adapted from Lynn & Adamson in Palliative Care. The Solid Facts, page15. WHO 2004.91
6
Migration studies
Do people with MS have
palliative care needs?
The correlation of latitude on the prevalence
of MS means that migration studies have
proved particularly interesting. In 1997
Dean and Elian reported that, in general, an
adult who migrates carries their original risk
of MS with them.24 However if a child (up to
the age of 15) migrates, they acquire the
risk closer to that of their host country.
Obviously this will have implications for
second generation immigrants from southeast Asian, West Indian and African states
in northern Europe.
There is increasing evidence to suggest
that people with advanced MS and other
long-term conditions have unmet health and
social care needs in the last year of their
lives.3 It is known that those with advanced
MS represent a ‘silent minority’ who have
often fallen out of acute care follow up39
and may benefit from specialised palliative
care services.73 These services promote
physical, psychological and spiritual
wellbeing, and emphasise quality of life
and good symptom control.89 Research
has shown that palliative care is effective
in improving symptom management and
quality of life care in cancer,71 and that
similar approaches are effective in the longterm management of neurological
conditions.8 There is evidence of the
effectiveness of interventions to control
pain,16 spasticity11 and breathlessness.56
Environmental factors
Given the evidence of the role of genetics
and the strong links with latitude, many
environmental factors have been
investigated, including vitamin D, diet,
sanitation and pollutants. Nothing
conclusive has been found so far but
research continues.
Unfortunately the progression of the
disease for people with non-relapsing
progressive forms of MS is not amenable
to disease-modifying treatments. It is
therefore all the more important that
appropriate palliation of attendant
symptoms and psychological distress
is given.
7
2 Palliative care
explained
This chapter explores the nature and provision of palliative care. It offers a
care pathway that suggests potential trigger points for considering making
referral or liaison with local specialist palliative care teams. It is aimed at
MS teams, neuro-rehabilitation teams and community nursing teams.
Palliative care offers a spectrum of provision,
from a palliative (or supportive) approach
through to specialist palliative care intervention from a dedicated team. A palliative
care approach is an integral part of all
clinical practice, whatever the illness or its
stage. The World Health Organisation’s
definition of palliative care states that:
Palliative care is based on these principles:
affirming life and regarding dying as a
normal process
G
providing relief from pain and other
distressing symptoms
G
integrating the psychological and spiritual
aspects of patient care
offering a support system to help patients
live as actively as possible
G
offering a support system to help the
family cope during the patient’s illness
and in their own bereavement
For many, palliative care has been
synonymous with end of life and cancer
care. People with advanced disease are
often described as having reached a
palliative stage of their disease. However,
it is widely recognised that a palliative care
approach has an important role throughout
the course of a non-curative disease,
and can be delivered in conjunction with
active disease modifying treatments.
A key principle in the guidance on the
commissioning of palliative care services
for adults is that ‘it is the right of every
person with a life-threatening illness to
receive appropriate palliative care services
wherever they are.’26 The National Service
Frameworks for long-term conditions,32
renal disease33 and cardiac disease31 have
stated that specialist palliative care should
be offered to people with advanced forms
of these diseases. The clear message is
that specialist palliative care should be
available on the basis of need and not
diagnosis.
Palliative care is the active holistic care
of patients with advanced, progressive
disease. Management of pain and other
symptoms and provision of psychological,
social and spiritual support is paramount.
The goal of palliative care is achievement
of the best quality of life for patients and
their families. Many aspects of palliative
care are also applicable earlier in the
course of the illness in conjunction with
other treatments.90
G
G
8
– this may involve the specialist palliative
care service providing specialist advice
alongside the patient’s own doctor and
district nurse to enable someone to
stay in their own home
Palliative care can offer guidance and
support in:
G
symptom control
G
psycho-social factors, including cognition
and capacity
G
advance planning
G
end of life issues
– many teams also provide extended
specialist palliative nursing, medical,
social and emotional support and care
in the patient’s home, often known as
‘hospice at home’
Who provides palliative care?
G
day care facilities that offer a range of
opportunities for assessment and review
of each patient’s needs and enable the
provision of physical, psychological and
social interventions within a context of
social interaction, support and friendship.
Many also offer creative and complementary therapies
G
advice and support to all the people
involved in a patient’s care
G
bereavement support services that
support the people involved in a patient’s
care following the patient’s death
G
education and training in palliative care67
All professionals involved in the day-to-day
care and support of people with advanced
MS may provide a palliative care approach.
However, some people with complex needs
may benefit from referral to specialist
palliative care teams for one-off assessment
or continued support.
The National Council for Palliative Care
states that those providing day-to-day care
should be able to:
G
assess the care needs of each patient
and their families across physical,
psychological, social, spiritual and
information needs
G
meet those needs within the limits of their
knowledge, skills and competence in
palliative care
G
know when to seek advice from, or refer
to, specialist palliative care services
Every area of the UK should have access
to both inpatient (hospital) and community
(home) palliative care teams. Specialist
palliative care teams can include consultants in palliative care medicine, clinical
nurse specialists and social workers,
together with a range of expertise offered
by physiotherapists, occupational therapists,
dieticians, pharmacists and those offering
spiritual support. Many areas also liaise
with an extended team, including
rehabilitation teams, pain specialists,
anaesthetists, psychologists and
counsellors.
Specialist palliative care services may be
able to provide:
G
assessment, advice and care for patients
and families in all care settings, including
hospitals and care homes
G
specialist in-patient facilities (in hospices
or hospitals) for patients who benefit
from the continuous support and care of
specialist palliative care teams to meet
complex needs
G
MS and palliative care
The NICE guidance for supportive and
palliative care for adults with cancer (2004)
sets out the benchmark for palliative care
services.71 While this guidance is oriented
towards cancer, many of its principles and
intensive co-ordinated home support for
patients with complex needs who wish to
stay at home
9
recommendations apply to MS. Many of the
symptoms experienced in the advanced
stages of MS can be similar to cancer, eg.
pain, nausea and breathlessness.72 But
some are specific to MS and require
understanding of the disease itself, for
example:
G
G
the unpredictability and variability of the
disease makes prognosticating on an
individual basis extremely difficult
MS is the commonest cause of chronic
disability in young adults causing longterm challenges. The situation may be
particularly difficult for young adults with
extremely aggressive disease who are
nearing the end of their lives
G
managing pain arising from spasticity
or neuropathic pain needs a different
approach from managing cancer pain16
G
cognitive and communication problems
limit the ability to express choice and
take part fully in counselling or other
supportive interventions. Staff may also
need further training in communication
skills89
G
there may be issues around mental
capacity and consent and the need for
advance directives
These points will be explored in greater
detail in Chapter 3, Palliative care
challenges.
Figure 3 Characteristic disease trajectory of long-term conditions such as chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and heart failure. This model may be
adapted to some progressive forms of MS.
Adapted from Lynn & Adamson in Palliative Care: The Solid Facts, page 15.
WHO 2004.91
10
One of these initiatives, the Macmillan Gold
Standards Framework or GSF,28 is being
used by primary health care teams to
optimise the care they offer to patients
in the last year of their life. Although
developed for cancer patients, the GSF is
being used increasingly for all patients with
long-term conditions. This has led to a
focus on unpredictable disease patterns
(eg. with neurological disease, organ failure
and coronary heart disease) and at what
stage they can be considered to have
reached the ‘advanced stage’ where
palliative care input should be considered.
The NICE guidance on palliative care
emphasises the importance of co-ordinated
planning and care across all agencies to
provide continuity of appropriate care.71
This guideline is reiterated in the NSF
for long-term conditions which states:
Professionals working within neurology,
rehabilitation and palliative care need to
work closely with primary care staff and
care providers, including non-NHS care
staff (social care, domiciliary and home
care) combining their expertise to support
people in the advanced stages of long-term
neurological conditions. (NSF, page 52 )32
Care pathway
When to consider liaison
with and referral to specialist
palliative care services
Informed by the work being undertaken to
extend the GSF to non-cancer conditions,
the care pathway in Figure 4 on page 12
has been designed for those with advanced
MS. It provides a tool for use by health care
professionals to identify possible triggers for
specialist palliative care referral or liaison.
Making a prognosis of likely disease
progression is notoriously difficult and often
beset with problems for cancer patients,
and more so for those with MS.
The protracted and unpredictable nature
of the disease gives rise to concerns that
patients will require long-term intervention
stretching specialist palliative care
resources to the limits. In contrast, the
experience of the clinicians researching
MS and palliative care in south-east London
was that only a small number (15%) of
people required ongoing specialist palliative
care follow-up, although others benefited
from one-off follow-up consultations or
joint assessments and collaborative care
planning.
It is important that people with MS benefit
from the initiatives being implemented as
part of the Department of Health’s Building
on the Best: End of Life Care Initiative.27
In this, the government outlined its
commitment to improve care for those
coming to the end of their lives, regardless
of diagnosis.
11
Figure 4 Care pathway: could this person with advanced MS benefit from specialist
palliative care?88
12
General predictors of end-stage illness
% CRITERIA
Able to carry on normal activity
and to work: no special care needed
100 Normal; no complaints;
no evidence of disease
90 Able to carry on normal activity
80 Normal activity with effort; some
signs or symptoms of disease
Unable to work; able to live at home
and care for most personal needs,
varying amounts of assistance required
70 Cares for self; unable to carry on
normal activity or do active work
60 Requires occasional assistance but is
able to care for most needs
50 Requires considerable assistance
and frequent medical care
40 Disabled; requires special care and
assistance
Unable to care for self: requires
equivalent of institutional or hospital
care; disease may be progressing rapidly
30 Severely disabled; hospital admission
may be indicated although death
not imminent
20 Very sick; hospital admission
necessary, supportive treatment
necessary
10 Moribund; fatal processes
progressing rapidly
0 Dead
Figure 5 The Karnofsky performance status scale38
13
3 Palliative care
challenges
This chapter outlines some of the challenges faced in caring for people
with severe or advanced MS, namely symptom management (pain, spasm
and spasticity, bowel management and nutritional support); capacity and
consent; advance planning; and end of life care.
The information may also provide a resource for training front-line staff
caring for people in their own homes and in hospitals and care homes.
SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
JK Wolf, a physician and person with
MS, considered that depressive
symptoms to be the most disabling,
spasticity to be the most frequent,
bladder symptoms to be the most
confusing and bowel problems to be the
most humiliating. Fallon 2004, page 93141
Symptom management is the cornerstone
of palliative care. The aims of effective
symptom management are to:
G
promote comfort
G
provide emotional support
G
prevent complication
G
improve quality of life for the individual
and family
bladder dysfunction
G
bowel dysfunction
cognitive dysfunction
G
depression
G
fatigue
G
loss of balance
G
mobility problems
G
muscle weakness
G
pain
G
spasm
G
sexual dysfunction
G
tremor
G
vertigo
It is the intangible or ‘hidden’ symptoms
that are especially problematic. Fatigue
is probably the most common symptom
experienced in MS. In an MS Trust survey
of 2,265 people with MS, 94% experienced
fatigue with 87% reporting an impact on
their daily activities that was rated as
moderate or high.65 Fatigue can be the
major cause of disability, even early in the
course of the disease, and is reported as
The following list of common MS symptoms
is by no means exhaustive and many
people will experience only a few of them:
G
G
14
different types of pain may lead to more
similar experiences than previously thought
(Dowdall KC in Johnson & Hoffman).54
the most likely factor to precipitate early
retirement from work.
Sound symptom management is still the
key to optimising quality of life for most
people with MS.65
Despite a plethora of available pain
assessments, health care professionals tend
to underestimate pain.86 A comprehensive
pain assessment needs to include:
PAIN
G
location of pain
As a symptom of MS, pain has been largely
neglected. Until the 1980s there was little
mention of pain in the literature and, in
fact, many papers reported MS as painless.
An estimated 80% of people with MS
experience pain at some time in their
disease.6 A study conducted in 1995 at the
National Hospital, Queen Square, London,
found that ‘discomfort’ rather than pain was
overwhelmingly experienced in their sample
of people with MS.54 One explanation is
that pain can be an emotionally charged
word with connotations of acute incident,
whereas MS pain is often more subtle and
difficult to describe.
G
duration of pain
G
descriptors (type of pain)
G
severity and frequency
G
aggravating symptoms: what causes an
increase or decrease?
G
disability caused by pain
G
effects of treatment
G
psycho-social factors
G
established pattern of coping49
Most pain results from normal activation
of pain sensors that warn us of actual or
impending tissue damage. Our protective
response is to move away from the source
of pain, so we move our hand away from
the hot fire or finger from the sharp knife.
Chronic pain does not serve any such
purpose. It is not a warning to change our
behaviour; it offers no biological advantage,
and causes suffering and distress. The
persistence of chronic pain, and associated
depression and disability, has a devastating
impact on a person’s quality of life. Patients
with chronic pain have been found to use
the health service up to five times more
frequently than the rest of the population.40
G
neuropathic pain resulting from
demyelination of the nerves
G
musculoskeletal pain related to abnormal
posture, immobility or possible
osteoporosis
G
headache
G
spasm and spasticity
The causes and types of physical pain in
MS are varied, and include:
Neuropathic pain
Neuropathic pain has been described as
pain initiated or caused by a primary lesion
or dysfunction in the nervous system.62 It is
suffered by about 1% of the UK population
(500,000), and is common in a wide range
of conditions including Guillan-Barré
syndrome, nerve compression by tumours
or nerve damage from radiotherapy and
chemotherapy as well as phantom limb
pain after amputation.
Pain is a complex multidimensional
phenomenon affected by physical, psychological, social and spiritual factors. In a
non-MS pain study, physical and emotional
pain was shown to share a neuro-cognitive
pathway. Both types of pain activated the
same area of the brain, which means that
15
Treating neuropathic pain
Neuropathic pain represents a huge
challenge to health care professionals
because it is difficult to recognise and
treat. This could be attributed to confusing
co-existing symptoms such as pins and
needles, numbness or weakness. It
may also be because the pain appears
more severe and long lasting than would
usually be perceived by the level of
disability of injury.
The aim of pain management may be to
reduce the pain and help people cope,
rather than eradicate the pain completely.
Common neuropathic treatments are:
G
Antidepressants
Tricyclic antidepressants such as
amitriptyline are considered by some to
be the drug of choice.79 They are used
primarily for depression, and people
should be aware that it may be a few
weeks before they notice a significant
reduction in pain. The drug is often given
at night, which is useful for those sleeping
poorly because of their chronic pain.
Neuropathic pain is classically described as
burning, pricking, tingling, electric shocks,
cold and itching.12 Patients also often liken
their pain to a sensation, like ‘insects
crawling under my skin’ or ‘a tightening
band across my middle’; Johnson says
adjectives consistent with abnormal
sensation such as ‘cold water running
down my (leg)’ are indicative of neuropathic
pain.54 A detailed description is important
where different types of pain co-exist. In
MS, the person may experience musculoskeletal pain around the shoulder girdle
from self-propelling a wheelchair but also
shooting neuropathic pains down the arms.
G
Anticonvulsants
The newer antiepileptic drugs are used
alone or in conjunction with tricyclics.
Gabapentin has been shown to reduce
pain in patients with a wide range of
neuropathic pain syndromes and induce
better sleep, mood and quality if life.78
Pregabalin also shows good efficacy in
neuropathic pain.
The complex mechanism of neuropathic
pain means that conventional drugs cannot
manage it, and patients often need to be
referred to specialists in pain management:
this may be a pain team or specialist
palliative care team. It is useful to gain a
history of the individual’s normal patterns of
coping, and which interventions have been
successful. Their behavioural response to
pain can also give clues for possible
treatments. If rubbing the painful area
relieves pain, then TENS (transcutaneous
nerve stimulation) may be a suitable
treatment. Gaining detailed information
gives an assessment of previous
understanding and compliance with
dosages as well as expectations for
success.
G
Opioids
Tramadol, a weak opioid, has been found
to be effective in neuropathic pain and is
considered to have low addiction
potential.84 Increasingly, pure opioids
such as morphine and oxycodone are
being used because of mounting
evidence of their efficacy. They are
particularly useful when used in
combination with tricyclics and/or
anticonvulsants.93 One study reported
that gabapentin and morphine combined
achieved better analgesia at lower doses
of each drug than either did as a single
agent.44
G
Non-pharmacological interventions
TENS and acupuncture, in the hands of
experienced practitioners, represent safe
therapies with broad anecdotal evidence
of efficacy in neuropathic pain.52
16
COMPLEMENTARY & ALTERNATIVE TREATMENTS
G
G
Massage
Massage is very popular and anecdotally
very helpful for some of the musculoskeletal symptoms of MS. It also appears
to help general wellbeing. One study
involved 24 patients with MS randomly
assigned to either a 45-minute massage
twice weekly for five weeks or to no
treatment. The massage group had
significantly lower anxiety and a less
depressed mood by the end of the study
and had significantly improved in selfesteem, body image and image of
disease progression. No conclusions
however, were drawn about physical
symptoms.47
Reflexology
This involves stimulating points on the
soles of the feet that are said to influence
the physiology throughout the body. It has
been investigated in MS on one occasion.
Seventy one patients were randomised to
either reflexology treatment with manual
pressure on specific points in the feet
and massage of the calf area, or to nonspecific massage of the calf area only.
Fifty three patients completed the study
and there were significant improvements
in the mean scores of paraesthesia
(abnormal sensations such as pins and
needles), urinary symptoms, muscle
strength and spasticity.83 Reflexology has
no known serious side effects. Sessions
usually last 30 to 60 minutes.
Figure 6 Analgesic ladder
Source: Palliative Care: Symptom Management & End of Life Care, WHO 2004.92
17
Musculoskeletal pain
paracetamol, commonly ulceration of
the upper GI system with pain, bleeding,
nausea and renal impairment.
Musculoskeletal pain is caused by
a variety of MS symptoms. It can be
caused by lack of mobility due to muscle
weakness, spasticity, poor sitting posture
and continued periods of self-propelling a
wheelchair. It can be exacerbated by the
loss of protective muscles due to weight
loss and stiffness. Whatever its cause,
this type of pain is often overlooked in
neurological conditions such as MS.
G
Weak opioids such as codeine,
dihydrocodeine and DF118 are used in
combination with a non-opioid analgesic
such as paracetamol in the second stage
of the ladder. There is a ceiling effect with
weak opioids, and if regular maximum
doses are unsuccessful, you need to step
up the ladder, ie. switch to a stronger
opioid rather than an alternative weak
opioid.
Treating musculoskeletal pain
The importance of a comprehensive
multidisciplinary assessment cannot be
overemphasised. Physiotherapy and
mobilisation may be extremely beneficial,
while simple non-pharmaceutical
interventions such as heat pads, topical
anti-inflammatory treatments and TENS
should be considered. Complementary
therapies such as acupuncture and
massage can also help.
When using any form of opioid, it is
important to discover if the person with
MS or their carer has any concerns about
these drugs that need to be explored.
It is also important to consider any
potential side effects such as nausea
and constipation.
G
Palliative care clinicians may be able to
offer a wealth of experience in terms of
pain management and are well versed in
the pharmacological treatment of complex
pain presentations.
Step 3 Morphine and strong opioids
Doctors may be concerned about giving
opioids to patients with chronic nonmalignant pain. This is a justifiable worry
if a systematic approach to selecting
patients has not been adopted. In noncancer patients under-prescribing of
opioids for pain is not uncommon. A
series of 124 motor neurone disease
(MND) patients admitted to a hospice
were compared to cancer patients
admitted to the same hospice.73 Pain was
less prevalent in the MND patients (57%
versus 69%) while insomnia (48% versus
29%) and constipation (65% versus 48%)
were more prevalent. At referral only 15
patients (12%) were receiving an opioid
even though 71 of them (57%) had
uncontrolled pain. During their hospice
stay, 109 patients received an opioid
on at least one occasion. This study
demonstrated the safety and efficacy of
morphine in the management of pain
and insomnia in a hospice population
with advanced MND. It also suggests
Although the analgesic ladder (Figure 6,
page 17) was developed for cancer pain, a
stepwise approach using a limited number
of drugs is probably equally acceptable for
the management of chronic pain due to
other causes.
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Step 2 Weak opioid analgesics
Step 1 Non-opioid analgesics
Paracetamol is a good analgesic and
most people experience few side effects.
However the maximum dose is restricted
by heptatoxicity. It may be sufficient on
its own but more often it is used in
combination as part of an analgesic
regime.
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDS) have more side effects than
18
that established principles of symptom
control could be applied to all patients
with neurodegenerative conditions.
Management and treatment of spasticity
The main principles of spasticity management include prevention of aggravating
factors and effective multidisciplinary
assessment.50
In 2003 the Pain Society published its
recommendations for the appropriate use
of opioids in chronic non-cancer related
pain. These were deemed necessary
due to the significant proportion of people
worldwide who would probably describe
themselves as severely disabled by
chronic pain. Opioids have proved
effective for some people but regular
assessment and evaluation is needed.
Interestingly, while there have been some
high profile legal cases debating the
appropriateness of opioid prescription for
chronic pain, there have also been cases
where patients have taken legal action
against health care professionals
because of inadequate analgesia.74
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EXTERNAL: pressure sores, skin
irritation, in-growing toenails, tight fitting
orthosis, blisters
INTERNAL: incomplete bladder emptying,
constipation, faecal impaction, urinary
infection, pain
PSYCHOSOCIAL: stress, anxiety,
bereavement
ENVIRONMENTAL: inappropriate
wheelchair seating, poor posture, warmth
G
SPASM & SPASTICITY
This resistance to passive movement is
caused by:
G
Multidisciplinary assessment
This is essential to prevent or minimise
aggravating factors and optimise an
individual’s environment. Opportunities
for multidisciplinary working and team
meeting are also vital for effective
communication and spasticity
management plans.50
The true nature of spasticity is still not
clearly understood but one of the most
succinct definitions is that it is: ‘the velocity
dependent increase in resistance of a
passively stretched muscle’.
G
Prevention of aggravating factors
(noxious stimuli)
NURSES can provide detailed
assessment of skin care, bladder and
bowel regimes.
abnormalities in the control of movement
generated by the CNS
PHYSIOTHERAPISTS may provide a
stretching or standing programme;
advising on posture and positioning
throughout the day.
biomechanical changes in the muscle
and connective tissue possibly leading to
contractures
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS play a key
In a recent survey of people with MS, 64%
reported stiffness and 51% muscle spasm.
Furthermore, 17% of those with stiffness
and 14% of those with muscle spasm felt
these symptoms caused them the most
difficulty and distress on a daily basis.65
role in environmental and seating
assessment.
G
Oral medication
The majority of people with advanced MS
will have tried anti-spasticity medication
at some point. Those presenting with
spasticity problems have invariably
found the drugs unhelpful and may be
searching for alternatives. A detailed
19
experiences did not correlate with the
outcome measures chosen for this study.
It still cannot be prescribed.7
history is useful to tease out the
circumstances around previous treatment
attempts. The individual may not have
had access to a comprehensive spasticity
plan from a multidisciplinary team. Care
must be taken in treating spasticity in
a person who is still able to weightbear
and therefore carry out activities like
transferring. The extensor spasm in
their lower limbs may be the reason
they can still carry out such activities
because the rigidity compensates for
their loss of strength. Using antispasticity
drugs at this time may make them feel
‘floppy’ and cause a loss of mobility,
which could leave them with negative
feelings about the medication. Should
they become a wheelchair user,
dependent on a hoist, a previous
negative experience may prevent them
from re-considering antispasticity drugs.
Doses can be started low and titrated to
give a feeling of control over possible
side effects.
OTHER TREATMENTS
G
Botulinum toxin injection
This is used where there is focal
spasticity. The botulinum is injected
directly into the muscles and acts as a
neuromuscular block causing paralysis
in the targeted muscle. It can take 10 to
14 days to take full effect. It needs to be
used in conjunction with a stretching
programme and physiotherapy input to
be fully effective and to see a change in
the muscle once the toxin has worn off.
G
Intrathecal baclofen pumps
For severe lower limb spasticity, a
small pump is inserted into the abdomen
and filled with baclofen. It has a small
catheter that transmits the baclofen
around to the intrathecal space of the
spinal cord. Delivering baclofen locally
into the intrathecal space allows small
doses to be used, which accentuates its
antispasticity property and minimises
troublesome systemic side effects. This
intervention requires commitment to
a number of in-patient stays within a
regional neurological centre for trial of
the drug and implantation of the device
as well as future pump replacements.
Many patients may also have to attend
the centre for regular refilling of the pump
reservoir with baclofen. Some local MS
or rehabilitation services now offer a local
pump refilling service.
BACLOFEN is the most commonly used
antispasticity drug. To counter side effects
the dosage should be low and increased
slowly, stopping at a dose that does not
cause too many side effects. It works
best if taken regularly. Extra doses may
be needed, for example during exacerbation of urine infections that may cause
a temporary increase in spasticity,
but this should be reviewed once the
underlying infection has been treated.
Many people find an extra dose can be
effective before sex if increased tone in
adducter muscles is a problem; however
they need to be cautioned that an
unwanted side effect is drowsiness!
G
If baclofen or gabapentin do not manage
the pain associated with spasticity, NICE
recommends using Tizanidine, diazepam
or dantrolene.70
Phenol blocks
Phenol is injected into the intrathecal
space to chemically sever the nerve
impulses to the lower limbs. Once
thought to be a permanent procedure,
it is now known that repeat procedures
may be necessary. Although every care
is taken (by careful positioning of the
patient) to select only motor nerve cells,
CANNABIS A recent multi-centre trial
demonstrated that although people with
spasticity reported improved spasticity,
pain and bladder function, their
20
CASE STUDY
intrathecal local analgesia. A trial of
local analgesic was given but was fraught
with procedural problems and gave only
partial relief. A phenol block to chemically
sever the sensory nerves serving the
hip and lower limbs, which could be
performed at a local hospice, was
discussed. (The complexity of CB’s
disease suggested that she would benefit
from the psychosocial as well as clinical
expertise available at the hospice rather
than at an acute hospital.) Unfortunately
these plans were superseded by an
acute episode of renal failure, which
meant an acute admission to a renal unit.
On discharge from the unit, CB decided
not to go ahead with the planned phenol
block. She was concerned about the
irreversible nature of the procedure and
felt that her pain could be controlled
with her existing pain relief interventions
if they were used before purposeful
movement and intervention. The teams
have also introduced topical analgesia
into her dressing and entonox
administration for dressing changes.
Six years ago, 35-year-old CB was
diagnosed with primary progressive MS.
While still mobile she fell and broke her
hip. Although it had been pinned, she
developed osteomyelitis in the joint,
which caused pain and discomfort. Her
hip dislocated on two further occasions,
once due to severe lower limb spasm.
CB is now bed-bound, suffers much pain
on movement and has developed two
grade four pressure sores that require
daily dressing. She is dehydrated,
nauseous and in some degree of renal
failure but she is well supported by a
dedicated community nursing team and
a devoted family.
A palliative care consultant who
assessed her needs diagnosed the
immediate problem as pain, which
caused her discomfort and an inability
to maintain personal hygiene. As an
interim measure Actiq (fentanyl) lozenges
on a stick were prescribed: the preparation is rolled around the mouth to
allow absorption of the fentanyl though
the oral mucosa. Manufacturer’s studies
suggest it takes between three to 15
minutes to be absorbed (mean eight
minutes). This proved sufficiently
effective for CB to access the pain
clinic at her local hospital.
CB continued to have ongoing support
of the local specialist palliative care team
and regular reviews from their consultant.
She was able to talk about her fears for
the future and concerns for her family.
The palliative care team has also
engaged with her family, offering support
to her two teenage sons who are now
linked into a young carers’ group. This
has eased CB’s concerns for them and
her feelings that she has become a
burden on her family.
In the meantime, CB was seen by a
physiotherapist from a local community
rehabilitation team. While she was
unable to tolerate any passive limb
movement, the physiotherapist was
able to advise on better positioning
and provide a TENS, which, with the
fentanyl lozenge, provided short-term
background relief.
CB now has the option of inpatient care
at the hospice for symptom control and
respite care whenever she needs it.
At the pain clinic various treatments were
discussed, including nerve blocks and
21
this cannot be guaranteed and sensory
nerves are usually affected as well. This
obviously has a huge effect on sexual
function and bladder and bowel management. Careful patient selection and
information is vital. Effective bladder
and bowel regimes need to be in place
already, and the spasm needs to be
severe and otherwise untreatable.51
G
G
LOSS OF NEUROLOGICAL CONTROL
To control bowel actions, it is necessary
to be aware of the ‘call to stool’. This
occurs as the faeces moves into the
rectum, causing it to expand and
send messages via the sensory nerve
pathways of the need to pass the stool.
It is important to be able to distinguish
whether the rectum now contains liquid,
gas or solid, as we may need to take
different actions depending on the
stool type. In MS, there is often loss or
distortion of these signals leading to the
loss or reduction of rectal sensation
altogether.
What can palliative care offer?
Palliative care is characterised by the
systematic and meticulous monitoring of
symptoms and their pharmacological
management. A holistic palliative care
assessment also identifies spiritual, social
and psychological distress that may
exacerbate the experience of many MS
symptoms such as pain.
G
PREVIOUS MEDICAL HISTORY such as
anal sphincter damage during childbirth:
this occurs in 80% of mothers having
forceps-assisted delivery.65
G
REDUCED MOBILITY appetite and ability
to ‘bear down’.
BOWEL MANAGEMENT
Bowel management in advanced MS has
received scarce attention yet remains
intrinsically important to comfort and quality
of life. Bowel problems are a common
source of distress. Toilet habits remain one
of society’s taboo subjects, and such
problems are massively under-reported
and neglected.
G
CONCURRENT MEDICATIONS
G
LACK OF TIME AND PRIVACY DURING
‘TOILETING TIME’ There is a huge
psychological component to the
performance of any of our private
bodily functions. For many people
with advanced disability, their reliance
on others to ‘toilet them’ at a specified
time is a huge barrier to being able to
perform. Similarly, carers often stay in
the bathroom while the person with MS
is trying to use the toilet. Many of us
would have extreme difficulty evacuating
on demand, to tight time constraints and
often with an audience.
Prevalence
Seventy per cent of people with MS
experience constipation or faecal
incontinence, which frequently co-exist.
A study by Sullivan and Ebers reported
that 53% of people with MS suffered
constipation,87 while another study suggests
that 53% suffered faecal incontinence.65
Bowel control is complex, involving the
co-ordination of many different nerves and
muscles. Overall bowel and bladder control
has been linked to lower limb dysfunction.
The following factors may contribute to
the problem:
G
WESTERN DIET It is estimated that 2%
to 20% of people experience constipation
without the added complication of
neurological damage.
G
A DEFINITION OF WHAT IS NORMAL
Tradition and culture play a huge part
in determining people’s expectations of
what is normal. Many older people have
a strong belief that bowels must be
opened at least once a day, and the use
22
of laxatives to enable this is common.
In fact bowel habits vary greatly from
two or three times daily to twice weekly
or less.77
G
Bowel assessment
Detailed re-assessment is of paramount
importance and a number of assessment
tools and pathways are in use.65, 30 An
assessment of stool consistency, of which
the Bristol Stool Form Scale is probably
most widely used, and a bowel diary can
help establish whether constipation or
incontinence is a problem.46
The NICE Guideline on the management of
MS identifies bowel problems and makes
four key recommendations:
1 each professional in contact with a
person with MS should consider whether
they have any problems with bowel
function
G
Diet
Diet is clearly an important factor in
bowel management. Any assessment
should be individualised and consider
dietary changes as well as the need
to increase or decrease fibre and fluid
intake. Fluid intake is dependent on
weight: as a rough guide a person
weighing 9 stone (57kg) requires 3 pints
(1.7 litres) of fluid a day, while someone
weighing 13 stone (82.5kg) requires 4.5
pints (2.5 litres) a day.1 Similarly if the
appetite is poor it may be unrealistic to
expect a significant daily bowel action.
2 anyone who appears to be constipated
should be offered advice on changes that
would help
3 anyone with faecal incontinence should
be assessed for constipation with
overflow
4 routine suppositories or laxatives should
be considered if difficulties are ongoing70
Bowel management and advanced MS
For people at an advanced stage of MS,
bowel management options may be limited.
Bowel difficulties are likely to have been a
problem for some time, with the involvement of the district nursing and continence
advisory service.
G
Concurrent medication
Many medications can have an impact
on bowel management. Anticholinergics,
used to decrease over-activity of the
bladder, and antidepressants are
commonly prescribed to people with MS.
Both are associated with constipation.
The NICE guidelines recommend that
patients are advised to increase fibre and
fluid intake as well as the level of physical
exercise.70 While this advice is important, it
may be compromised by the individual’s
level of disability and personal preferences.
Someone with swallowing difficulties who
chooses not to have a PEG feeding tube
may find increasing fluid intake tiring and
problematic. Conversely, having a loaded
bowel will cause general discomfort and
possible exacerbation of spasticity, which
can be painful and troublesome to the
wheelchair user. The inter-relationship
of symptoms on an individual’s general
wellbeing and quality of life should not
be underestimated.
G
Laxatives
The management of constipation extends
well beyond the use of laxatives. The
aim of laxative therapy is to achieve
comfortable defaecation rather than
frequency of evacuation. Although most
laxatives are not very palatable, oral
laxatives should be used whenever
possible. Bulking agents should be
avoided but the use of a stool softening
aperient is important. Movicol is preferable to lactulose as it is does not cause
the same degree of flatulence and
bloating. Stimulants such as senna
or sodium docusate may be required.
23
EVACUATION DIFFICULTIES The gastro-
continence. MS can cause problems
with this neurological integrity and
the sensation required to maintain
continence.23 As part of any assessment,
it is important to consider whether there
is overuse of laxatives, or constipation
with faecal impaction and resultant
overflow. Overflow accounts for half the
cases of diarrhoea and such patients
require rectal laxatives together with a
stool softener.42 Care is required with
stimulant laxatives as they may cause
colic.
colic reflex is the normal urge to open
your bowels after eating, especially
30 minutes or so after breakfast or
hot liquids. Most people who rely on
paid morning carers attempt to open
their bowels without eating or drinking
first. The problem may be compounded
by lack of privacy and fear of being
under a time constraint. Subtle improvements to a care regime, however, could
include having a warm drink or some
breakfast before getting up. Of course
an individual risk-assessment would be
necessary to ensure safe swallowing
when reclined in bed, but it would also
provide an opportunity to take any pain
relief or antispasmodic medication that
might make hoist transfers more
comfortable.
Consideration should be given to the
underlying cause but, with the exception
of the scenarios above, symptomatic
relief is generally achieved with nonspecific antidiarrhoeal agents such as
loperamide (up to 16mg daily) or codeine
(10 to 60mg every 4 hours). Codeine
may cause drowsiness or sedation but
this is rare with loperamide.
Assisted manual evacuation, involving
perineal support, digital stimulation and
manual evacuation, is suitable for a
small number of people with MS. It is
indicated for faecal impaction, incomplete
defaecation, inability to defaecate, and
neurogenic bowel dysfunction. The
RCN80 and the National Patient Safety
Agency68 have published guidance on
risk assessment and procedure.
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Containment advice and products
The containment of incontinence can
improve home care and there are many
products available. Medication, pads
and anal plugs may be available on
prescription through the district or
continence nursing service. Nonprescription items such as bed
protection and commodes can be
bought privately or loaned through
an equipment loan store.
STOMA FORMATION For some people,
stoma formation may be a means of
maintaining independence, privacy and
dignity. While this extreme intervention
needs careful and informed consideration, it should not be dismissed out of
hand. Requests for consideration of a
stoma are often ignored or even refused
before specialist opinion has been
sought.
NUTRITIONAL SUPPORT
Before you can blink a PEG is inserted
and there hasn’t been a lot of discussion
around the long-term implications
Health Care Professional, MS/Palliative Care
Project, King’s College, London
FAECAL INCONTINENCE The Department
of Health publication Good Practice in
Continence Services estimates the
prevalence of faecal incontinence as
1% of adults living at home, with 17%
of the very elderly reporting symptoms.30
Neurological dysfunction affects
the mechanism involved in normal
Many people with advanced MS develop
some degree of dysphagia. This is often
compounded by the presence of excessive
saliva, weight loss, fatigue and loss of
appetite. It is important that the patient has
24
Any decision is made in their best interests,
taking into account their own assessment of
their quality of life, wellbeing and spiritual or
religious beliefs. This is a highly individual
set of considerations for which a specialist
in palliative care has appropriate experience
to facilitate.
regular assessments by a multi-professional
team involving speech therapists, dietetic
specialists and occupational therapists.
There is also a role for palliative care
specialists.
The goal is to maintain nutrition by an oral
route for as long as possible. This period
may be extended by appropriate eating
aids, achieving better head positioning
through use of collars and head supports,
as well oral food supplements. The decision
to have a gastrostomy tube inserted does
not necessarily herald the end of oral
feeding. It can form an important part
of future planning and take some of
the pressure off arduous and fatiguing
mealtimes. A gastrostomy tube can then be
used to supplement hydration and nutrition
when necessary. However it is important to
be aware of the optimal timing for placement of a feeding tube.
CAPACITY & CONSENT
This person I care for, is not the wife
I knew. Carer of person with advanced MS,
MS/Palliative Care Project, King’s College,
London
COGNITION
Up to 65% of people with MS have some
cognitive impairment and 5% to 10% suffer
global cognitive impairment. Contrary to
previous belief, a recent longitudinal study
by Amato in 2001 has found a significant
relationship between severity of cognitive
impairment and duration of MS.5 Cognitive
impairment places an enormous strain on
carers, most usually the spouse, who has
to adapt to new roles and sometimes also
to profound personality changes in their
partner.20 The implication of these findings
is that choices need to be discussed much
earlier in the disease trajectory so that there
can be no challenge to a patient’s capacity
in making these choices and everyone is
clear about their wishes.
If a patient becomes too emaciated and
weak they are less able to withstand the
gastrostomy procedure and may have to
undergo the insertion of a nasogastric tube
or no feeding at all. Not only does this deny
an individual choice, it can also cause
ethical dilemmas. If a patient has entered
a terminal phase of their illness it may
be obvious that to proceed with artificial
hydration and nutrition is inappropriate but
it is a more difficult decision for those with
only a limited prognosis.
As well as the individual’s ability to undergo
a placement procedure, there are practical
issues about the community and carer
support that may or may not be available.
Of paramount importance is whether the
benefits of starting feeding outweigh the
likelihood of complications during the
procedure, or post-procedure infection,
regurgitation or aspiration. Indeed, the
patient may not always see prolongation
of the prognosis as a good thing. Advance
planning and discussion, with or without
writing a formal advance directive, ensure
that the patient’s wishes are known.
The incidence of depression is also greater
in advanced MS. This is due to organic
brain changes that are part of the disease
itself as well as reactive depression,
caused by the challenges and demands
of disability. Bipolar disorder is increased
twofold and treatment of relapses with
steroids not infrequently unsteadies the
mood. Suicide rates are more than seven
times higher than the ‘normal’ population.81
Emotional liability can affect 10% to 25% of
people but may be contained by taking low
dose SSRI (such as Ciprimil).
25
Competency
For consent to be valid, an individual must:
Cognitive impairment or changes in the
mental health of people with advanced MS
may lead health care professionals to be
concerned about their ability to make sound
decisions. Formal testing of cognitive
impairment is generally carried out by a
neuropsychologist but depends on the
setup of the local service. An assessment
is likely to involve:
G
have mental capacity
G
be informed
G
be free from coercion
G
psychometric testing
G
IQ
G
memory
Mental capacity
Unless there are concerns or evidence to
the contrary, the law assumes that a person
has mental capacity. There are three stages
in determining whether someone has it:
1 Can they comprehend and retain the
necessary information? This is obviously
important in any disease that causes
memory impairment or intermittent
competence such as Alzheimer’s
disease.
CAPACITY
Capacity is a legal term and part of the
three-point test for consent. Any health care
intervention requires consent and this can
be given as implied or explicit consent. A
patient visiting their GP who proffers their
arm to have their blood pressure checked is
giving implied consent. Consent for surgery
tends to be in a formal written and explicit
format.
2 Can they believe in it (within their own
belief structure)?
3 Can they can weigh up the information,
balancing the risks and arrive at a
choice? This last stage requires cognitive
abilities to make a decision on the basis
of the information presented.
CASE STUDY
and sought an injunction from the High
Court to stop the amputation going
ahead. The judge applied the three-point
test to C and decided he did have the
mental capacity to refuse the amputation.
This case shows that a person can suffer
from a specific form of mental disorder
yet still have the requisite mental
capacity to give or refuse consent.
Doctors advised patient C, who had
chronic paranoid schizophrenia, that he
had gangrene in his foot. C suffered
delusions of grandeur, believing he had
a successful medical practice himself.
Vascular surgeons believed he would die
unless he had a below-knee amputation.
His chances of survival were assessed
as no better than 15% if he had
conservative treatment only. C stated that
he would prefer to die rather than lose
his leg. He refused to give his consent
(Re C 1984 1 WLR 290, legal case
quoted Kennedy & Grubb)55
26
Be free from coercion
The capacity must relate to the decision
being made. There are obviously different
levels of decision making, from deciding
what to wear to whether to donate a kidney.
Some people suffering from learning
difficulties, for example, may be able to
make sound decisions on day-to-day
matters but unable to make more critical
decisions.
Consent needs to be given with free will
and without deception. A Department of
Health guide to good practice in consent
implementation warns against patients
being pressurised by parents and family
members or health and care professionals
who might unknowingly exert pressure
through a sense of duty or awareness of
resource constraints.29
Irrational decision making
Disagreeing with an individual’s decision or
believing they are making a decision which
is against their best interests is not a
determinant of mental capacity.
Lasting power of attorney
‘Lasting power of attorney’ was created by
the new Mental Capacity Act in 2005. This
allows someone to legally appoint a person
to take decisions on their behalf if they
subsequently lose the capacity to do so
themselves. The Act, which comes into
force in April 2007, extends the current
‘enduring power of attorney’ to cover
decisions about personal welfare, including
health care and consent to medical treatment, in addition to decisions about property
and financial affairs.
Be informed
Information should be given to individual
patients in an appropriate medium and
language. Health professionals have a:
…duty to inform patients according to the
reasonable standards recognised by
accepted practice.34
Patients must also be informed of
significant risks that are likely to cause
substantial harm. The courts have not
defined when a risk is ‘significant’ and they
have been reluctant to rely on percentages,
such as patients needing to know about
all risks higher than 10%. However it is
clear that even a small risk that could be
devastating, such as a 1% risk of paralysis,
will be of more concern than a 50%
chance of bruising. Risks that have special
significance for a particular individual also
need to be given, for instance a violinist
may be more concerned than anyone else
about a 25% risk of losing sensation in their
fingers. Of course this cannot be assumed,
and highlights the importance of impeccable
assessment and communication skills.
An attorney can be given general authority
to make decisions or authority over specific
decisions such as refusing artificial feeding,
hydration and other life sustaining treatments. Attorneys can only refuse life
sustaining treatment if there is a clear
statement to this effect in the legal
document that gives them power of
attorney. Anyone can be appointed as an
attorney, they do not have to be a lawyer.
They can be family members or friends,
and there can be more than one attorney.
In Scotland a separate Adults with
Incapacity Act 2000 applies, but the
provisions are similar.
27
ADVANCE PLANNING
A typical example of an advance directive
is the card carried by Jehovah’s Witnesses.
This states the treatments or care that is
being refused, and is signed by the person
refusing the treatment and a witness.
Everybody should have the right to make
choices yet some people with advanced
MS are denied this. It may be because a
discussion about their future wishes has
never been initiated or because speech
difficulties, caused by weakness of the
muscles or fatigue, have become a barrier
to communication. Palliative care specialists
may be able to support or facilitate
discussions about advance directives,
future management and place of care.
In Canada an unconscious Jehovah’s
Witness who was given a life-saving blood
transfusion, despite the fact that she was
carrying a card, won compensation against
her doctor (Malette vs. Shulman 1990). The
doctor was deemed to be guilty of battery in
treating her against her express instructions.
The House of Lords in the Tony Bland case
referred to this Canadian one, saying:
‘…respect must be given to the patient’s
wishes where the patient’s refusal to
give his consent has been expressed at
an earlier date, before he has become
unconscious or otherwise incapable of
communicating it.’36
ADVANCE DIRECTIVES &
LIVING WILLS
It is a basic principle of law on consent
that a mentally competent adult can
refuse treatment for a good reason,
a bad reason or for no reason at all.
Re MB 1997 2 FLR 426, legal case quoted in
Dimond 2004, page 98636
How should they be drawn up?
Living wills and advance directives are
subject to the same three-point test
required for determining consent.
A mentally competent adult can express
their wishes about their medical care to
guide doctors should they lose the mental
capacity to make decisions or the ability to
communicate them. These earlier declared
views are known variously as a living will,
an advance directive or an advance
refusal of treatment. An important point
to note is that these constitute statements
about refusals not requests for possible
treatments.
1 The individual must be over 18 and have
mental capacity at the time they express
their advance refusal
2 They need to be informed, and should
understand the nature and consequences
of what they are refusing
3 They need to be free from coercion
At present there are no statutory provisions
governing the validity of a living will. This
means judges still have the discretion to
decide whether decisions are valid or not.
However the BMA Code of Practice on
advance statements says:
Law in the UK is made by statute
(parliament) or derives from decided cases
(judge-made or case law). Cases such
as Airedale NHS Trust vs. Bland 1993
have established the legality of advance
directives. In the case of Mr Bland, a victim
of the Hillsborough disaster who was in a
persistent vegetative state, the House of
Lords decided his artificial feeding could be
discontinued in his best interests. They said
if he had set out an advance directive, that
directive would have been binding upon the
health professionals caring for him.36
An unambiguous and informed advance
refusal is as valid as a contemporaneous
decision. Health professionals are bound
to comply when the refusal specifically
addresses the situation which has arisen.14
28
The BMA suggests the minimum data that
should be contained in a living will:
The difficulty is that a circumstance may
arise that the living will has not foreseen.
A person with MS, for example, may decide
to refuse ventilation and artificial feeding
should their disease progress and they
are unable to communicate their wishes.
However if they sustain a severe head
injury in a traffic accident and require
ventilation there would be concerns about
operating their advance statement and
withholding ventilatory support. Clearly,
these circumstances do not meet the
situation that the individual had envisaged
when drafting their living will. If there is
uncertainty about the validity of an advance
directive, a declaration should be sought
through the courts and, in the meantime,
the patient given all necessary support.
1 full name
2 address
3 name and address of GP
4 whether advice sought from health care
professionals
5 signature
6 date drafted and reviewed
7 signature of witness
8 clear statement of the person’s wishes,
either general or specific
9 name, address and telephone number of
any nominated person, if there is one
CASE STUDY
AB demonstrated that she was fully
competent in her decision to remain at
home. She understood the risks and
could weigh up the pros and cons. She
was also aware she would not always get
the care she needed from her partner.
AB, a 36-year-old woman with secondary
progressive MS, lived at home with her
partner who was her main carer. She had
three school-age children fostered and
awaiting a court ruling. She had become
bed bound and was not eating or
drinking. She showed a high level of
personal neglect and had begun to
refuse the help of paid carers. She
would not engage with rehabilitation
professionals but had a good relationship
with her social worker. She was adamant
that she wanted to remain at home
despite her environment and personal
care needs.
Confident that she would not be ‘taken
away’ she now allowed paid carers into
her home to deliver a minimal care
package. She was adamant that she
wanted conservative future treatment
to minimise hospital admission and
engaged with the local specialist
palliative care services. They were
able to provide a period of respite care
and, as a result, she elected to have
future infective episodes treated at
the local hospice. AB died during her
second admission to the hospice from
overwhelming sepsis. Her partner and
children continued to receive support
through the hospice’s bereavement
counselling services.
A palliative care consultant offered a joint
home visit with her social worker. AB was
anxious that she would not be allowed to
remain at home in the long term. A shortterm hospital admission was negotiated
with the express aim of achieving better
symptom management and an assessment of her mental capacity.
29
Relatives
An advance directive does not have to
conform to any particular form or be drawn
up by a lawyer to make it legal.
In the UK the views of relatives can be
taken into account, but they have no legal
right to decide treatment.14 In the case of an
adult who lacks mental capacity refusing
medical treatment, Lord Donaldson
cautioned against relying on the wishes of
relatives:
Consultation with a doctor is not essential
but may be useful to explore treatment
options and demonstrate that an informed
decision-making process has occurred.
However, it should be in writing because
casual remarks about health care cannot be
used as the basis of an advance directive,
and it needs to be reviewed regularly.14 It
only comes into force when a patient is
unable to make or communicate a decision;
it offers guidance only and should not be a
barrier to communicating directly with the
person about their contemporaneous
wishes, which may have changed or no
longer concur with their advance directive.
‘There seems to be a view in the medical
profession that in…emergency circumstances the next of kin should be asked to
consent on behalf of the patient and that, if
possible, treatment should be postponed
until that consent has been obtained. This
is a misconception because the next of kin
has no legal right either to consent or to
refuse treatment.’ (1992 4 All ER 649)37
CASE STUDY
and unable to communicate her wishes
effectively. However, in a recent full and
frank discussion with her husband she
had expressed her firm desire to consent
to all life-prolonging measures. She
considered herself to have a good quality
of life and wished to ‘be around to boss
him for a little longer’.
DF was a 63-year-old woman with very
advanced secondary progressive MS
who had lost the use of her arms and
legs. Although she was no longer able to
communicate verbally, she used mouthcontrolled assistive technology very
effectively. She still managed an oral diet,
although her swallow was poor and she
was at repeated risk of aspiration.
Consequently, she developed a chest
infection and was admitted to an acute
hospital to be treated with intravenous
antibiotics. However DF’s condition
continued to deteriorate, necessitating
ventilatory support to survive. She was
referred to specialist palliative care by
nursing staff who were concerned that
ventilatory support was not in her best
interests, given her level of disability.
DF was ventilated and made a good
recovery. She continued to suffer
recurrent chest infection and on her
third admission decided to have more
conservative treatment of antibiotic
therapy instead. On her next admission
she took up the offer to move to the
hospice where time was taken to
discuss her end of life issues. During
a subsequent chest infection she died
peacefully at the hospice, despite the use
of antibiotics to palliate its symptoms.
DF was fatigued and breathless at the
time of her palliative care assessment,
30
Advance directives, living wills,
euthanasia and assisted suicide
an explanation about the risks of chest
infection and possible treatment options.
It is possible to have a tiered approach to
treatment, considering at what point the
individual would like to stop active intervention at each episode. The question is
to treat or not to treat, and individuals may
wish to consider their views on:
Advance directives and living wills are often
confused with debates about euthanasia
and assisted suicide. This is partly because
the Voluntary Euthanasia Society was one
of the first to launch a living will pro-forma.
Advance directives allow people to take
some control over end of life decisions,
which may involve life-prolonging treatment.
They do not permit illegal actions and are
not concerned with taking measures to
end a person’s life. At present euthanasia
and assisted suicide are illegal under
British Law.
G
intravenous antibiotics and chest
physiotherapy
G
tracheostomy
G
artificial ventilation
Edmonds suggested that the complex
needs of people severely affected by MS
are not always adequately met in an acute
hospital setting.39 Although the MS/Palliative
Care Project was a small-scale study,
sub-optimal hospital conditions were a
strong concern of people affected by MS
in south-east London. While this cannot be
extrapolated into a widespread experience,
it does beg the question whether treatment
can be provided in alternate settings and
places of care. For those with comprehensive care packages, oral antibiotic
therapy may be give at home, and district
nurses could attend those with PEG feeding
tubes and administer antibiotics using this
route. Alternatively, hospice admission for
intravenous antibiotics could be considered
for those who have had specialist palliative
care input.
ADVANCE PLANNING & MS
Living wills and advance directives have
the advantage of promoting discussion
and sending a clear message that difficult
subjects can be broached. There are a
number of interventions that may become
appropriate for people with advanced and
severe MS such as supra-pubic catheterisation and PEG feeding, which are often
offered too late to allow time for explanation
or to improve quality of life.
Conversely, when a team approach to
offering information, open discussion and
demonstration of any equipment has
resulted in a refusal to consent to any
intervention, those wishes should be
respected. Morally and ethically it can be
difficult to support a decision that you know
will deny the patient a better quality of life,
but the team approach gives you the
support of your peers.
There is a range of alternatives that can
increase the choices offered to patients
although they will depend on local
resources and services.
Cardio-pulmonary resuscitation
Ventilation
A patient has a right to be resuscitated if
the procedure is reasonably likely to be
successful and if s/he has a reasonably
good prognosis following resuscitation.36
The need to discuss ventilation becomes
apparent for the individual with swallowing
difficulties, who suffers from the respiratory
risks of aspiration. This is often marked by
chest infection increasing in frequency, if
not severity as well. Any discussion requires
This right is enshrined under Article 2 of the
Human Rights Act: ‘Everyone’s right to life
31
monitored and auditable.37 The tangible
result for the patient is that they are likely to
be asked about their views on resuscitation
by complete strangers within hours of being
hospitalised, probably at a time of heightened stress, vulnerability and exacerbation
of their MS.
shall be protected by law. No one shall be
deprived of life intentionally…’36 and by the
duty of care owed by the medical and
nursing staff to their patients.
Guidance drawn up by the BMA, RCN and
Resuscitation Council, and commended to
NHS Trusts emphasises that each individual
patient must be assessed personally for
their wishes on resuscitation.15 There can
be no blanket policies and no discrimination
on the grounds of age or perceived quality
of life. Resuscitation decision-making
processes have come under scrutiny
from The Commission of Heath Audit and
Improvement (CHAI), and have to be
Views on resuscitation are better initiated
in advance of any hospital admission by
carers, key workers or health professionals
who are familiar with the patient. This
information needs to be documented and
shared with the wider caring team.
Symptom
MS(1)
Cancer(2)
Heart disease(2)
Respiratory disease
Pain
68%
35-96%
41-77%
34-77%
Fatigue
80%
32-90%
69-82%
68-80%
Nausea
26%
6-68%
17-48%
not known
Constipation
47%
23-65%
38-42%
27-44%
Breathlessness
26%
10-70%
60-88%
90-95%
(1) King’s College London MS/Palliative Care Project
(2) Solano, Gomes, Higginson, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 2006, 31, pages 58-69
Figure 7 Cause of death
32
END OF LIFE CARE
subcutaneous fluids can also be given at
home to minimise unwanted hospital
admission.
I want to find out if it [MS] can kill you
[laughs]…I want to know if you’re going
to die from it. You know, that’s the main
thing that’s been on my mind since I’ve
been told. Person with advanced MS King’s
Excessive saliva is a major challenge
in caring for a person with MND but it
can also be evident in advanced MS.
Medication needs to be started early in
order to gain control of symptoms. Unlike
other treatments, glycopyrronium rarely
causes sedation or delirium because it
penetrates biological membranes slowly
and erratically. It can be given orally or via
a syringe driver or PEG. Dosages of 200
to 400 microgram tds given orally or via
a gastrostomy tube can dry secretions
effectively for up to eight hours.10
College London MS/Palliative Care Project
Die with or of MS?
Sadovnick, Eisen, Ebers and Paty found
that in about 50% of patients with advanced
MS, cause of death is related to complications of chronic disease, usually sepsis
and fatigue caused by overwhelming
infection.82 Overall, causes of death are
similar to the rest of the population: heart
attacks (11%), tumours (16%) and stroke
(5%). The increased risk of suicide has
already been discussed.
Spirituality
Spirituality is difficult to define, precisely
because it encompasses the immeasurable
and often unspoken aspects of humanity.
Spiritual needs are not necessarily the
same as religious needs, and people who
would not define themselves as religious
may still have spiritual needs. Health
professionals should not assume that
spiritual care is the province of religious
leaders. While this can be true for some,
it might ignore the needs of others with no
religious affiliation. Identifying and meeting
all of an individual’s needs are at the
core of providing spiritual care. Including
spiritual care in every aspect of care,
providing opportunities for talking and
listening, and identifying other routes such
as music that are meaningful and helpful
to the individual, are all potential aspects
of good spiritual care.
Symptoms in the last few days of life are
common to many disease areas, and
derive from similar underlying physiology,
namely breathlessness, nausea, confusion,
insomnia, pain and overwhelming fatigue
(see Figure 7). This means that robust
expertise can be applied across the board
to provide comfort in the last few days
of life.
While discomfort and pain related to
spasticity is a central feature throughout the
course of MS, most people will be opioidnaive compared with their cancer counterparts. Slow-release analgesic preparations
may be useful, particularly delivered
topically through patches or subcutaneously
using a syringe driver.
Nausea is generally due to a catabolic
state. Individuals may be uraemic and
becoming septic. An appropriate anti-emetic
should be given via an appropriate route.
Fluid intake is likely to be poor and
There is some preliminary evidence that
religious and spiritual belief can affect the
way patients and their relatives cope with
bereavement.
33
A ‘GOOD DEATH’
NHS end of life initiatives
According to the National Council of
Palliative Care, 56% of the population
would prefer to die at home but only 20%
manage to achieve this. In contrast, only
11% of the population would choose to die
in hospital, as opposed to 54% who actually
do.67 The Department of Health paper,
Building on the Best: Choice,
Responsiveness and Equity in the NHS,
supports people’s right to choose where
they want to die.26 There is evidence to
suggest that palliative care for people with
neurodegenerative conditions can be
provided effectively in a home environment
if a co-ordinated team approach is adopted
(NSF 2005 page 52).32 Current information
suggests that the numbers of people able
to die at home is low and decreasing.
Communication difficulties can be a barrier
to people being able to express their choice
in this matter.
It is important that people with MS benefit
from the innovations being implemented as
part of the Department of Health’s NHS End
of Life Care Initiative.27 To improve care for
people coming to the end of their lives
regardless of diagnosis, £12 million has
been committed over three years. The
investment will specifically aim to support:
G
the Macmillan Gold Standards
Framework (GSF) developed for GPs,
primary care teams and care homes
G
the Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying,
for dealing with the last 72 hours of life in
hospital, primary care settings and care
homes
G
the Preferred Place of Care tools, which
empower people to choose where they
would prefer to die
While initially developed for use with cancer
patients, these tools are being adapted to
meet the needs of all patients requiring end
of life care.
The concept of a ‘good death’ has
developed as an important feature of
modern palliative care, although what
constitutes a good death and whether it is
possible or desirable is still open to debate.
There appears to be consensus related to
pain control, dignity, privacy, choice of the
location of death, and support for spiritual
and emotional needs, but the extent to
which people should be able to control their
death and dying introduces wider ethical
questions.
Teamwork
The NICE guidelines on palliative care
emphasise the importance of co-ordinated
planning and care between all agencies.71
This is reiterated in Requirement 9 of the
National Service Framework for Long-term
Conditions, which states:
Professionals working within neurology,
rehabilitation and palliative care need to
work closely with primary care staff and
care providers, including non-NHS care
staff (social care, domiciliary and home
care staff), combining their expertise to
support people in the advanced stages
of long-term neurological conditions.32
The House of Commons Health Committee
enquiry into palliative care suggested that:
‘it is only by removing the taboo of the
discussion of death, throughout all stages
of life, that a better understanding of the
realities of dying and death, better
communication skills and ultimately better
service provision will be delivered.’ 48
It is evident that the care of people with MS
requires input from a range of professional
disciplines in the community, hospital and,
possibly, hospice settings. The overall
objective is to ensure that people achieve
and maintain an optimal level of symptom
34
service for people with advanced MS.
Two groups of 18 people meet on
alternate weeks. The aim of joint
working was to improve identification,
assessment and treatment of physical,
social and psychosocial complex
problems. The day-care programme
includes various complementary
therapies, art therapy, networking,
support and socialisation as well as
spiritual care and respite for carers.
While the many benefits include
improved symptom management,
wellbeing, quality of life, self-esteem,
confidence and empowerment, the
project will be researched to assess
ongoing benefits with the aim of
promoting the work as best practice.
control and functional status at all stages
of their illness. Care will inevitably involve
considerable explanation, reassurance and
support.
How can good teamwork be achieved?
The NSF will not be fully implemented until
2015, so access to specialist palliative care
can be inconsistent in different areas of the
UK. Despite this, government and specialist
palliative care providers are committed to
offering services to those who need them.
Examples of good practice
The good examples of teamwork below
illustrate innovation and burgeoning
services that are being established
nationwide.
G
G
The NSF for Long-term Conditions
suggests specialist palliative care teams
working alongside specialist neurology
and neuro-rehabilitation teams (eg. in
joint clinics) could promote more
consistent shared practice32
Training in palliative care skills for staff
providing care in people’s own homes,
hospitals and care homes
– Brambles, an MS Society respite care
centre, works closely with the local
hospice, St Catherine’s, to meet the
needs of people with complex needs.
An exchange programme between 11
staff from the hospice and 11 staff from
Brambles was recently completed.
The two-day experience offered one
day for training and one for practical
application. The programme was
extremely well received by staff, raising
awareness of the skills implicit in
each other’s jobs. The exchange also
enhanced communication and two-way
advice. Brambles staff were particularly
interested in the lymphoedema, respiratory and counselling services offered
through the hospice. Since then, advice
and assessment of lymphoedema from
the hospice has been a direct benefit to
Brambles guests.
– St Richards Hospice in Worcester has
recently appointed a nurse specialist
whose remit is to develop specialist
palliative care services for people with
non-malignant conditions. The hospice
itself has received an increase in the
number of referrals for day hospice
care, especially from those with MS.
The post-holder hopes to develop the
service to provide homecare support
in the community. There is strong
commitment to developing collaborative
working practices with local neurology
teams and the MS nurse specialist.
The post has been funded 50% by the
hospice and 50% by the MS Society for
the next three years.
G
– The University Hospital North
Staffordshire MS nurses, working in
collaboration with their local palliative
day-care team at the Douglas McMillan
Hospice, offer a palliative day-care
Forums for information exchange
– The North West Regional Link Group
was established in 2003 with the aim of
influencing care and knowledge of MS
among health care professionals who
see people with MS on a regular basis.
35
care felt they needed to increase their
skills and knowledge to meet the needs
of this client group. In 2005 a small
working party was set up with
representatives from neurorehabilitation, specialist palliative care
and a person with MS. Their starting
point has been a well-attended joint
study day, with further sessions
planned for the future. The working
party plans to look at issues around
continuing care as well as practical
matters such as the provision of, and
training for, specialist equipment like a
suction machine.
The group is informal and acts as
an opportunity for multidisciplinary
networking. Membership consists
of nurses, rehabilitation therapists,
palliative care specialists and primary
care teams. Among other topics
discussed by the group, a session
was run on palliative care management.
– The Greenwich and Bexley Cottage
Hospice runs a group called the
Cakewalk Café from 10am to 3pm
twice a month. The group is open to
anyone living with a life-threatening
illness, carers and those who have
been bereaved. Membership includes
people living with cancer, MND, MS
and HIV. The hospice counselling team
offers practical help and support, lunch
is provided, and alternative therapies
such as massage and reflexology are
offered. The Cakewalk Café has an
attendance of about 65 people and has
been a springboard from which other
support groups have developed.
– Other examples of joined-up working
in Newcastle include the CMST ‘sister’
service, the Regional Disability Team,
which has a long association with the
local Leonard Cheshire Home and
has been working on an education
programme for staff covering the later
stages of MS.
– The Community MS Team (CMST)
Regional Neurological Rehabilitation
Centre, Newcastle, was set up in
1995 as a joint venture between health,
social services and the local branch
of the MS Society. Based in the
community, it provides physiotherapy,
occupational therapy, counselling and
psychology, and is linked to MS
specialist nurses and neurologists at
the acute trusts to ensure joined-up
services for people with MS.
The team is also a member of the
Regional Partnership Forum for the
North of England, an MS Society
initiative to improve services for
people with MS, which brings together
health and social care providers.
Members of the CMST interface
with palliative care on an increasingly
regular basis as more clients with
advanced MS live at home. They and
their colleagues in specialist palliative
36
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Addington-Hall, J. et al. (1998) Specialist
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Addington-Hall, J.M. and Higginson, I.J. (eds)
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39
Written by Sally Plumb
Edited by Lynda Finn
With thanks to Patricia Brayden, Rachel Burman, Lynda Finn, Vicki Gutteridge, Janet Johnson,
Mary Mahoney, Diane Playford, Liz Searle, Carolin Seitz and Liz Waddy
© Multiple Sclerosis Society 2006
Printed April 2006
42
Professional resources
MS National
Centre
372 Edgware Road
London NW2 6ND
Tel 020 8438 0700
Scotland
Northern Ireland
Wales/Cymru
Ratho Park
88 Glasgow Road
Ratho Station
Newbridge EH28 8PP
Tel 0131 335 4050
The Resource Centre
34 Annadale Avenue
Belfast BT7 3JJ
Tel 028 9080 2802
Temple Court
Cathedral Road
Cardiff CF11 9HA
Tel 029 2078 6676
MS and palliative care
A guide for health and social care professionals
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common disabling neurological disorder
affecting young adults, and around 85,000 people in the UK have MS.
The MS Society is the UK’s largest charity
dedicated to supporting everyone whose
life is affected by MS – personally or
professionally. The MS Society works
with health and social care professionals
to improve services by:
•
promoting good practice in MS
treatment and care
•
publishing newsletters, reports and
educational materials
•
organising networking opportunities
and events
•
funding health and social care posts
in community, rehabilitation, primary and
acute care settings, and in palliative care
•
funding research into the cause, cure,
and management of MS, as well as
development of services, with an overall
research commitment of £12m
The MS Professional Network is a group
of health and social care professionals with
a common interest in improving services for
people affected by MS. Membership is free
and includes regular newsletters,
conferences and learning events. To join,
go to www.mssociety.org.uk/profs or call
020 8438 0810
Including information on
• palliative care for people severely
affected by MS
• optimising quality of life during advanced
phases of MS
• end of life care
www.mssociety.org.uk
National MS Helpline Freephone 0808 800 8000
Registered charity 207495